Wednesday, January 5, 2022

"I think it's the hill to die on." Part 2


Found on the street in Berkeley.
Rebel Girl is on the road, wearing her K-95 mask everywhere and showing her vaccination credentials to anyone who asks. She and Red Emma dropped off their offspring at UC Santa Cruz (Go Banana Slugs!) and kept driving north. It's a Judy Chicago and Joan Mitchell art tour, a little of the world before the Spring semester starts. She is now holed up her favorite Berkeley dive hotel, grading late student work (Radical flexibility! Redemption is possible!) and re-planning the Spring semester (Online 'til early February...!)

Meanwhile she is keeping up on the news coming out of O.C., especially those alarming infection numbers. It takes a lot to shock Rebel Girl, after all, she is now 60, but the news this week of the COVID-caused death of Kelly Ernby, truly shocked her. Ernby was last seen in this blog at the side of Supervisor Don Wagner just a month ago at the December 4 anti-vaxx mandate rally at Irvine City Hall.  See "I think it's the hill to die on."  The deputy D.A. and former candidate for Assembly, a "rising star" of the OC GOP, was 46 and, according to her husband, unvaccinated. 

Rebel Girl first found the story via the LA Times which broke the story with the excellent comprehensive coverage by Gabriel San Roman: 

Kelly Ernby, former Orange County GOP state Assembly candidate and deputy D.A., dies of COVID-19

Wagner and Ernby.

Rebel Girl had looked forward to returning to the classroom because hey, two years of computer-mediated teaching and learning is just not the same, no matter what anyone says. It isn't. So little joy. Such limited learning. We are losing so many students in so many ways. 

But is the danger real? It is. 

And the likelihood of returning continues to jeopardized by the kind of hollow leadership pictured above. 

The Register reports that Supervisor Wagner declared his intention to "continue if invited, speaking out against the mandates, and also saying that my choice is to get vaccinated and I believe it should be the choice most people make, absent a genuine health concern or absent a religious objection."

1964: The light I gave to you

 1964: the Jelly Beans, "I Wanna Love Him So Bad"  

 1964: The Shangri-Las, "Remember (Walkin' In The Sand)"  

Note the allusion to military service: boyfriend got drafted?

 1964: Dusty Springfield, "Wishin and Hopin'"
This is the second Bacharach/David tune recently, the other being "My Little Red Book," performed by Love.

 1964: The Drifters, "Under the Boardwalk"

     MEANWHILE: Monday night, I found that neither my phone nor my internet wifi worked, and since I don't have a cell phone (not one that works in these hills), that's pretty serious. The semester is about to begin and, well, being incommunicado isn't helpful.
     The next day, I called AT&T and tried to get them out here to fix the lines. The best I could do was a window of 8:00 a.m. to noon today. 
     They never showed up. They did not communicate with me using the ways I gave them (my sister's land line, etc.).
     I called again. They said they'd try to get someone out there by 6:00. But again, they were a no show.
     I've been trying to call AT&T in the last hour, but they're overwhelmed and said to call back later.
     Naturally, I've been through this before. On occasion, I've been forced to wait weeks while they get their freakin' acts together.
     The world ain't what it used to be. Sheesh.
     UPDATE [Thursday night]: The AT&T guy is supposed to show up between 8 and 12 Friday morning. We'll see.
     UPDATE [Friday night]: they never showed this morning. Eventually, I guy showed mid-afternoon and couldn't fix it. He'll be back tomorrow afternoon, I guess.
     UPDATE 1-8: still have no service. Technician won't call back.
     UPDATE 1-9: at long last, the lines are repaired—but the problem seemed to be something other than the causes earlier claimed. —Whatever; I'm once again connected to the world.

 1964: The Beach Boys, "Don't Worry Baby"
Inspired by the Ronnettes' "Be My Baby," which was a hit a year earlier. Some consider this the Beach Boys' finest recording and Brian's finest vocal. It's my fave.

Roy's obituary in LA Times and Register: "we were lucky to have you while we did"

  This ran in the Sunday December 24, 2023 edition of the Los Angeles Times and the Orange County Register : July 14, 1955 - November 20, 2...